Let's put things into perspective :)



The sheer magnitude of how much money there is in the world can be quite staggering—and hard to understand. What if you could visualize every market in the world as a bubble?


Earlier this year the total U.S. stock market cap surpassed $30 trillion. It then lost more than $1 trillion in a single month. Apple was the first company worth over $1 trillion in the modern era (now Microsft get there too :)).

The U.S. national debt surpassed $21 trillion, and the deficit for next year is expected to add another $1 trillion.

But just how big are these numbers? Can we get some perspective?

Visualization prepared by HOWMUCH can help keep things in perspective. The cryptocurrency market is certainly one of the fastest growing and most exciting assets in the world, and indeed it makes many people think of the 2000 dot-com bubble. Some even say it’s the biggest bubble of all time. You can find countless articles about bitcoin and ethereum on the Internet. But for all the hype, the entire crypto market is worth only a tiny fraction of the gold market, which is itself only worth about 10% of the entire world’s stock markets. The good news? If the bubble has already popped, there’s potentially plenty of upside in cryptocurrencies. Pundits also spill a lot of ink about the U.S. national debt, which is indeed staggering at $21.35T. The concept of a “trillion” is impossible to comprehend, let alone 21.35 trillion. But now consider all the debt in the world, counting everything like mortgages and municipal bonds.

Don’t get it wrong, the U.S. debt seems out of control, but it’s still less than 10% of the world’s total debt load. That being said, a lot of pundits see the massive accumulation of debt as itself a bubble. It would take more than 3 times the value of all the stock markets in the world to pay off the world’s debts. Is that sustainable? Even more interesting is the market for derivatives at $532T. Most people know about the role unregulated derivatives played in the housing market crash. In short, derivatives are most commonly used as ways to purchase assets (especially commodities) in the future. They can, therefore, swing wildly in value, and at present amount to well over $500T, more than double all the debt in the entire world. Maybe the media should pay a lot more attention to derivatives than every tiny scandal in the crypto market.